My aim is to offer insights into some of the more subtle principles underpinning prints. The commentary is based on thirty-eight years of teaching and the prints and other collectables that I am focusing on are those which I have acquired over the years.
In the galleries of prints (accessed by clicking the links immediately below) I am also adding fresh images offered for sale. If you get lost in the maze of links, simply click the "home" button to return to the blog discussions.

Sunday, 27 May 2012

Before I begin to propose a
solution to portraying the relative depth of water—or the depth to any spatial
void for that matter—I need to address an important issue concerning the prints
examined in the following discussion. When an original drawing is copied onto a
printing plate for reproduction, as is the case with Richard Earlom’s mezzotint
of Claude Lorrain’s drawing [plate] No. 5
(shown below), invariably some of the subtleties of the original drawing are
lost in the translation from one medium into another. While this is probably unavoidable
there is also the chance that the reproductive printmaker may make changes to
“improve” the original image with slight adjustments. I mention these
possibilities as the approach to portraying depth that I now wish to propose
could be interpreted as a critique of Lorrain’s drawing when in fact the image
I am examining is really the outcome of Earlom’s interpretation of Lorrain’s
drawing.

Richard Earlom (1743–1822) after

Claude
Gellée known better as Claude Lorrain
(1600–1682)

[Plate] No. 5. From the Original Drawing in the Collection of R.P. Knight Esq., c. 1775
from Liber Veritas published by John
Boydell, 1807

Mezzotint
on wove paper,

23.2 x
31.5 (plate); 30 x 42.8 cm (sheet)

Condition:
faint spotting on verso and a 0.5cm tear on left margin well away from the
image otherwise in excellent condition with no blemishes.

I am
selling this print for $95 AUD including postage and handling to anywhere in
the world. Please contact me using the email link at the top of the page if you
have any queries or click the “Buy Now” button below.

One way to represent depth of water
is to employ a very simple illusion involving the shape of the body of water. When
representing shallow water, artists use outward bulging curves like those of a
clover leaf to depict the water’s edge (see clover shape below). When
representing deep water, they use inward arcing curves like those of a holly leaf
to depict the water’s edge (see holly shape below). This focus on the shape of
the body of water involves what perception theorists describe as a “figure and
ground” illusion. For theorists, the water is perceived as the “figure” when it
is perceived to be on top of the surrounding rocks or earth by virtue of convex
curves and as “ground” when it is perceived to be below the surrounding rocks
or earth by virtue of concave curves.

(left)
clover shape (right) holly shape

To illustrate this phenomenon I
have made a schematic drawing of a waterfall with a pool of water at its base
(see below). Compare how the perception of the water’s depth changes from shallow
water when the pool is constructed with convex curves like those of a clover
leaf as opposed to deep water when the pool is constructed with concave curves
like those of a holly leaf.

(left)
shallow water with clover shape (right) deep water with holly shape

In
Earlom’s [plate] No. 5 this
perceptual play of representing the water is “figure” (i.e. shallow) and
“ground” (i.e. deep) is interesting to examine. If we look at the silhouette
edge of the rock closest to the centre of the pool (see detail below), for
instance, the water is scalloping its outline leaving the rock as a holly
shape. From my viewpoint this is an awkward arrangement as, especially at the
more distant aspects of this rock the water appears to be on top of the rock.
Going further when the upper edge of the rock is isolated from its context the
water could well be interpreted as overlapping the rock like the ocean tide
coming over a shoreline (see detail further below).

Detail of No. 5.

Detail of No. 5.

Artists can overcome such a problem
by “building” concave curves out of either straight lines or small convex sections.
Interesting the same idea of only using straight lines or convex curves is also
applicable to drawing people as our bodies are fundamentally bone, tendon and
muscle with very few concave areas. To illustrate the difference of how the
outline of the rock would appear if the curves were replaced with straight and
convex lines see the digital alterations below.

(above)
detail of No. 5 with concavities

(below)
digitally altered detail of No. 5 without
concavities

A good example of the use of a
holly-shape configuration of rocks around water can be seen in another
mezzotint by Earlom reproducing a different drawing by Lorrain, No. 43 (shown below). Here swirling
water is depicted with very few concavities but this print has one other
interesting feature with regard to water: it portrays a narrow body of water by
the darkening the tone of the water into the more distant reaches of the
stream. This is a fascinating visual device as large bodies of water, such as
lakes and broad rivers, are portrayed as becoming lighter into the distance
whereas the reverse is true for narrow bodies of water like streams and creeks.
In the digitally modified images further below the tonal arrangement on the
water has been reversed to illustrate this phenomenon.

Richard Earlom (1743–1822) after

Claude
Gellée known better as Claude Lorrain
(1600–1682)

[Plate] No. 43. From the Original Drawing in the
Collection of R.P. Knight Esq., c. 1775

from Liber Veritas published by John Boydell, 1807

Mezzotint
on wove paper,

20.7 x
26.3 (plate); 27.2 x 34 cm (sheet)

Condition:
Excellent condition with no blemishes. Cut unevenly with 0.5 cm margin on left,
7.3 cm margin on right, 2.5 cm margin on top and 4 cm margin at bottom.

I am
selling this print for $85 AUD including postage and handling to anywhere in
the world. Please contact me using the email link at the top of the page if you
have any queries or click the “Buy Now” button below.

Sunday, 20 May 2012

Like all broad generalisations
there will always be exceptions, but if I were to reduce all the factors that come together in the most memorable artworks then three principles are essential:

projection (to arrest a viewer’s attention and
to invite the viewer to look at the featured subject);

visual dialogue (to express meaning by
comparison of the centre of interest with another pictorial element); and,

alluding to subject material outside of the field
of view (to conceptually expand the range of projected meanings beyond the
featured subject material).

In the following discussion I will
address each of these principles and explain how Hendrick Goltzius and Giovanni
Battista Piranesi have applied them.

My choice to use Hendrick Goltzius’ Apostle Simon (shown below) as an
example of the first principle—projection—is simple; I love the print.
Moreover, I find myself drawn to keep looking at it. For me, the attraction has
nothing to do with the physical beauty of the subject as I am sure that there are few viewers
who would see Saint Simon as eye candy. I am, nevertheless, attracted by the
finely engraved lines rendering the image (see details further
below) but this is only a small part of the reason I love the print. The primary
attraction lies with Saint Simon’s hands. This is especially true with regard
to the saint’s left hand and more specifically with his third finger so
emphatically pressing on the ground as if the saint is making a ideological
point. This arrangement of the forward projected finger is the element that
both arrests my eye and draws me into the image. After this pictorial
“introduction” into the image my eye then follows a gently spiralling course.
First stop is the saint’s left hand. Next, my eye moves to traverse across the
book (bible?) the saint is holding to arrive at his right hand. After pondering
the odd way that Saint Simon holds the book—mindful that the saint’s hands
is undoubtedly modelled on Goltziius’ own deformed right hand (see drawing in
Teylers Museum Haarlem)—my eye is then lead along his right arm to finally
“rest” on his face (see diagram of the rhythm below) before making visual
forays to examine other pictorial features like the saw of his martyrdom.

I am
selling this print for $560 AUD including postage and handling to anywhere in
the world. Please contact me using the email link at the top of the page if you
have any queries or click the “Buy Now” button below.

This print has been sold

(Detail) Apostle Simon, 1589

(Detail) Apostle Simon, 1589

(Detail) Apostle Simon, 1589

Diagram of inward rhythm, Apostle Simon, 1589

Although the middle-finger of Saint
Simon’s left hand is the point of introduction into the image, there
are other elements in the print contributing to an invitation to look. For
example the spine of the open book also draws attention inward as do the
converging lines of the saint’s arms. To make the point of this discussion
clearer in terms of how the eye is invited to engage with the act of looking
and thinking, compare the difference in how the eye is not so welcomed by the
arrangement of hands and arms in Golzius’ Apostle
Bartholomew. This is true even though there are many other pictorial devices inviting the
viewer’s eye to gaze into the print’s pictorial depth, such as the flaying
knife of the saint’s martyrdom and the saint’s backward tilt of his head.

Hendrick Goltzius (1558–1617)

Apostle Bartholomew, 1589

From the suite Christ, The Twelve Apostles and St.
Paul

14.4 x 10.4 cm (plate) right and
left with small margins, cut on the platemark at the top, cut slightly inside the platemark at the bottom, on fine laid paper with watermark “Double Eagle”

Marvellous lifetime impression of
lll (of Vl)

Bartsch 49; Hirschmann 40 lll (of
VI)

Condition: traces of use, otherwise
in good condition

I am
selling this print for $360 AUD including postage and handling to anywhere in
the world. Please contact me using the email link at the top of the page if you
have any queries or click the “Buy Now” button below.

This print has been sold

(Detail) Apostle Bartholomew, 1589

(Detail) Apostle Bartholomew, 1589

Regarding the second principle—visual
dialogue—I will return to Goltizius’ Apostle
Simon as this print is so cleverly composed and rich in subtle use of
visual devices.

To begin at a very fundamental
level, even the most cursory look at the image will show a connection between
the saint and his book. This relationship between the centre-of-interest—the
saint’s head—and the book he is examining is a fine example of visual dialogue.

On a more reflective examination of
the image, however, there is more to this visual dialogue than just the saint
reading his book. He is also responding to what he is reading and this is
signified by the gesture of the middle-finger of his left hand. This hand gesture
that I proposed earlier as Saint Simon making an “ideological point” (i.e. a
body-language gesture of clear emphatic certainty) does more than depict Saint
Simon fully engaged in his reading. This gesture is the punctum point
(discussed in an earlier post focused on Dujardin and Dietricy) of the whole
image. In short, this single finger is the pivotal feature in the composition that
shows the intensity of the saint’s reading of the book.

Even more
subtle than the triangulation between the saint’s head, book and finger is the
visual dialogue between the saint’s central lock of hair and the tuff or grass
in the centre foreground (see diagram below). To my eyes, this visual connection
created by the similarity of form between the hair and grass is important to
the expression of a decisive moment in the saint’s reading. From my viewpoint,
I see the link as establishing a line of separation between the related dual
gestures of the saint’s hands.

Diagram of visual dialogue, Apostle Simon, 1589

For the final principle—alluding to
a subject outside of the field of view— Piranesi’s etching, The Tomb of the Plautii near Ponte Lucano (shown
below) is an excellent example. Here the shadow cast by an unseen structure
lying beyond what can be viewed in the image creates a theatrical dimension of
an unknown presence. This shadow not only hints at the form of the structure
casting it but the shadow’s shape—especially the “extension” of the shadow’s
shape into the cloud pattern—creates a window-like effect by framing the far
distance. This principle is a very useful
device for giving an artwork pictorial breadth). To illustrate what the print
would be like without the shadow, compare the original etching with a view of
the same tomb without a shadow (see the digitally manipulated image below).

Beyond the use of shadows, another
way to connote subject material beyond what is visible is the simple device of
cropping the portrayed subject at the framing edge of the artwork. Again,
Piranesi’s print is a good example of this approach as the portrayed tomb is
not a panoramic view where the whole building can be seen but is cropped by the
left and top edges of the format. This cropping ensures that a viewer understands
that the image is only a section of a much broader view and
this projects the notion and feeling of breadth.

Condition:
excellent impression on wove paper without watermark, with margin around the
platemark, minimal traces of use, browned and foxed with the blind stamp of the
Calcografia di Roma

I am
selling this print for $960 AUD including postage and handling to anywhere in
the world. Please contact me using the email link at the top of the page if you
have any queries or click the “Buy Now” button below.

Sunday, 13 May 2012

What are some of the differences
between copying and referencing other artists’ artworks?

To coincide with an exhibition of
my drawings presently being shown at the JamesCookUniversity, this discussion focuses on
my drawing practice and the relationship between copying, translating and
interpreting artefacts and prints by other artists.

If there is truth to the view that an
artist’s intention for creating artworks is the keystone to his or her art
practice, then I had better offer an overview of my aim for this exhibition.
Broadly, the primary goal is to create a visual dialogue based on comparison between
my perception of featured subjects and other artists’ perceptions of the same
subjects. By this I mean that I like to
reflect upon the art practices of other artists (like Piranesi discussed in the
earlier post, Artefacts and Meaning), and to see
points of difference and congruence between their approach and my own. For example,
my drawing, Referencing
Jacque (shown below), features the same subject as Charles Emile Jacque’s
(1813–94) etching, Mendiant (also
shown below), but there are noticeable conceptual and physical differences
between both artworks. Whereas Jacque’s print depicts a beggar drawn with confident
and quickly laid marks suggesting that the artist was looking directly at the
subject, my drawing is clearly a studio-based image constructed over time though
a layering of marks, colours and many adjustments. Beyond the pictorial
differences, conceptually, Jacque’s unconstrained candour in his rendering of the beggar presents a slice of reality—arguably so authentic a
representation that this print could be seen as an iconic representation of
a historically fading rural life in nineteenth century France. My drawing, on the
other hand, is far from a copy of Jacque’s vision. This is a drawing about a play with light and shade in
which soft French light is substituted with stronger and warmer light of the
tropics. In short, both Jacque and my images feature the same subject but there
is a large gap in the meanings expressed.

James
Brown

Referencing
Jacque, 2012

Pen and ink on watercolour paper

76 x 57 cm

I am selling this drawing for $850 AUD including postage and
handling to anywhere in the world. Please contact me using the email link at
the top of the page if you are
interested or click the “Buy Now” button below.

Charles Emile
Jacque (1813–94)

Mendiant [Beggar], 1846

Etching, chine colle on laid paper

9.5 x 8.3 cm (plate)

(G119)

I am selling this drawing for $97 AUD including postage and
handling to anywhere in the world. Please contact me using the email link at
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In
terms of conceptual focus, Referencing
Millet (shown below) shares the same exploratory base as the last drawing
in that it is also a practical experiment examining how patterns of light and
shade can connote differences between France
and the tropics. Here, the referencing of Jean-Francois Millet’s etching, Peasant Returning from the Manure Heap
(also shown below) introduces changes to the lighting arrangement resulting
from an unexpected event. One morning, when contemplating the previous night’s
adjustments to the drawing, I noticed light beaming through shutters onto the
middle-left of the paper and recognised that the shadows cast by the shutters
added the shadow pattern needed. Although such an adjustment may seem minmal,
the process of making each alteration to Millet's original image was guided by
small models made for the purpose of study (see further below).

James
Brown

Referencing Millet, 2012

Pen and
ink on watercolour paper,

76 x 57 cm

I am selling this drawing for $850 AUD including postage and
handling to anywhere in the world. Please contact me using the email link at
the top of the page if you are
interested or click the “Buy Now” button below.

Jean-Francois Millet (1814–75)

Peasant Returning from the Manure
Heap, 1855–56

[Sold]

(left) plaster model for Referencing Jacque

(right)
plaster model for Referencing Millet

Although the above drawings acknowledge
their source images reasonably closely the pictorial and conceptual gap between
the referenced and referencing artwork can considerable. In Referencing Le Clerc (shown below), for instance, the
focus is again on adjusting the lighting of the original print (also shown below) to
match my perception of light in the dry tropics, but this drawing goes further.
Here, Le Clerc’s figure allegory has been erased and replaced with an image
that I see as identifying with George Seddon’s interesting comment that
“Australian landscapes are seamless. They rarely compose so neatly into
identifiable ‘scenes’” (see Seddon, George 1997, Landsprints: Reflections
on Place and Landscape,Cambridge,
Cambridge University Press, p. 138).

James
Brown

Referencing
Le Clerc, 2012

pen and ink on watercolour paper

57 x 76 cm

I am selling this drawing for $850 AUD including postage and
handling to anywhere in the world. Please contact me using the email link at
the top of the page if you are
interested or click the “Buy Now” button below.

I am selling this print for $120 AUD including postage and
handling to anywhere in the world. Please contact me using the email link at
the top of the page if you are interested or click the “Buy Now” button below.

This print has been sold

Of course, the idea of referencing
other artist’s practice is not uncommon. In fact there is a
tradition of reproducing other artists’ images stretching back to
the Renaissance with the Weirix brothers, Hendrick Goltzius and Marcantonio
Raimondi amongst many others who translated their peers’ paintings, sculptures
and drawings into prints. This tradition culminated with the reproductive engravers of the
nineteenth century who offered the only alternative for recording artwork for
dissemination in books and folios before the advent of photogravure.

From a personal standpoint, there
is a distinct difference between reproductive illustrations intended to be accurate
representations of a subject and translations or interpretative illustrations intended
to reveal an artist’s perception of a subject. With the former type of
illustration the goal is about a object replication of the subject at least
with regard to some of the more obvious features of the subject whereas the
latter involves subjective transcribing of the subject into a new vision of it.

In the sample of drawings shown
below, the process is not so much copying plaster casts taken from early
sculptures as a process of translating three-dimensional form into the
two-dimensions of a drawing. There is more to the process, however, than
measured drawing and tonal rendering of form. Each drawing references another
artist but the drawing itself is not a representation of another artist’s practice
but rather a conceptual shifting of meanings that personalises it as my own
practice.

James
Brown

Apollo
Belvedere—3 Faces, 2012

Lemon juice and ink

57 x 76 cm

I am selling this drawing for $850 AUD including postage and
handling to anywhere in the world. Please contact me using the email link at
the top of the page if you are interested or click the “Buy Now” button below.

James
Brown

David’s
eye, 2012

Lemon juice and ink

76 x 57 cm

I am selling this drawing for $850 AUD including postage and
handling to anywhere in the world. Please contact me using the email link at
the top of the page if you are interested or click the “Buy Now” button below.

James
Brown

David’s
Ear, 2011

Lemon juice and ink

76 x 57 cm

I am selling this drawing for $850 AUD including postage and
handling to anywhere in the world. Please contact me using the email link at
the top of the page if you are interested or click the “Buy Now” button below.

James
Brown

David’s
Nose, 2011

Lemon juice and ink

76 x 57 cm

I am selling this drawing for $850 AUD including postage and
handling to anywhere in the world. Please contact me using the email link at
the top of the page if you are interested or click the “Buy Now” button below.

James
Brown

Apollo
Belvedere—Front, 2011

Lemon juice and ink

76 x 57 cm

I am selling this drawing for $850 AUD including postage and
handling to anywhere in the world. Please contact me using the email link at
the top of the page if you are interested or click the “Buy Now” button below.

Sunday, 6 May 2012

Mindful that digital manipulation
of imagery is a recent phenomenon, what are some of the techniques used by
early printmakers to alter images?

One of the more interesting traditions
of what is now described in digital terms as “cutting and pasting” began in the
seventeenth century with English portrait engravings. Some of the more
enterprising (and perhaps less ethical) printmakers and their publishers at
this time sought to reduce the labour cost of producing portraits of their
clients by erasing the faces portrayed in earlier printing plates and substituting
portraits of their new clients. Sometimes these replaced faces were augmented
with minor changes to the figures’ surroundings.
For example in John Faber's mezzotint, George
Byng, Viscount Torrington, not only is Byng’s face replaced in the altered
plate, Edward Vernon, but the ledge
on which Byng rests his right hand has been replaced with the barrel of a
cannon on which Vernon’s hand rests.

﻿﻿

John Faber the elder(c. 1660–1721)

(left) George Byng, Viscount Torrington, 1718 (state I)

(middle and right) Edward Vernon (states IV; V)

Mezzotint, 35.2 x 25 cm

(Layard, George Somes 1927, Catalogue Raisonne of Engraved British
Portraits From Altered Plates, From the Notes of George Somes Layard, Arranged
by H. M. Latham, Philip Allan, London, p. 16.)

The removal and replacing of
imagery in plates such as these is made almost seamlessly by the medium of
mezzotint. In a way the process of mezzotint is a bit like the building up of
an image by pixels in that the image on the plate is created by tiny dots. In Frank
Short’s demonstration print of the mezzotint process The Elements of Mezzotint (shown below) Short explains this
engraving process:

The upper
portion is intended to exhibit the work of the rocker, and for that purpose it
is divided into two parts. The uppermost or lightest part was prepared in the
same way as the darker subdivision immediately under it, but it was afterwards
scraped quite clear of bur so as to exhibit the effects of the rocker’s
teeth in digging into the copper. The nine strong dotted lines are lines of “ways,”
showing the direction of rocking. Here
they are etched; in a plate intended for future work they are temporarily
marked in chalk [see detail below].

The whole of
the lower example was rocked “full,” showing the depth to be obtained by
leaving bur untouched and also qualities of shade to be obtained by its partial
removal with the scraper [see detail
further below]. (Hamerton, PG 1892, Drawing & Engraving: A Brief Exposition of Technical Principles and
Practice, Adam and Charles Black, London,
p. 148 [tissue guard].)

Frank Short (1857–1945)

The Elements of Mezzotint, 1892

Mezzotint on wove paper

16 x 10.8 cm

Condition: pristine condition

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have any queries or click the “Buy Now” button below.

Detail of upper portion

Detail of lower portion

The alterations to these early
plates often went further than a chopping and changing of faces and their
surroundings. Like the facility offered by “Exposure” and “Curve” tools in Adobe’s
Photoshop software, the mezzotint engravers could also adjust the tonal
contrast in the plates by applying the process outlined above by Frank Short to
either give or remove a note of theatrical drama produced by lighting. Compare
for instance the change in the tonal contrast between R Williams’ Thomas Betterton and the transfiguration
to William Faithorne’s Sir William Read
(see below). Interestingly, Thomas Betterton
(1635–1710) was, according to Layard (1927), the “most eminent tragedian of the
Restoration period.” Sir William Read (d. 1715), on the other hand, was “an itinerant
quack, and was knighted for curing seamen and soldiers of blindness, and made
oculist to Queen Anne” (Layard, George Somes 1927, Catalogue Raisonne of Engraved British Portraits From Altered Plates,
From the Notes of George Somes Layard, Arranged by H. M. Latham, Philip
Allan, London, p. 9.)

R. Williams

(left) Thomas Betterton (state I)

William Faithorne the younger (1656–1701?)

(right) Sir William Read (state IV)

Mezzotint, 33.9 x 25 cm

(Layard, George Somes 1927, Catalogue Raisonne of Engraved British
Portraits From Altered Plates, From the Notes of George Somes Layard, Arranged
by H. M. Latham, Philip Allan, London, p. 8.)

Even the most acclaimed and
accomplished mezzotint artists engaged in altering their plates to accommodate
fresh faces. For instance, Valentine Green(1739–1813) is arguably one Britain’s finest
mezzotint portrait artists and yet he too loosened his artistic integrity to
allow his print, Isabella,Duchess of Rutland, to be morphed into Frederica, Duchess of York (shown
below). In terms of what may be seen as minor changes to the portrayal of
Isabella to accommodate Frederica—alterations to the hat, upper section of the gown
and, of course, a facial reconstruction (see both images further below)—there
is a significant change to the projected meaning of the two portraits. In the
portrait of Isabelle, our focus is allowed to move away from her face to dwell
on the exquisite rendering of her gown and the composition as a whole. In the
portrait of Frederica, however, our eye is held by contact with Isabelle’s
attention directed to us. In short, Frederica is looking at us in a way that is
difficult to disengage from. This seemingly subtle shift in projected meaning
is what makes both images uniquely different even though they are both
essentially made of the same pictorial ingredients.

Valentine Green(1739–1813)

Frederica, Duchess of York, 1793

After Sir Joshua Reynolds

Mezzotint, 63.4 x 38.8 cm

Detail of Frederica, Duchess of York

Valentine Green(1739–1813)

(left) Isabella,
Duchess of Rutland, 1780 (state I)

(right) Frederica, Duchess of York, 1793(states IV)

Mezzotint, 35.2 x 25 cm

(Layard, George Somes 1927, Catalogue Raisonne of Engraved British
Portraits From Altered Plates, From the Notes of George Somes Layard, Arranged
by H. M. Latham, Philip Allan, London, p. 109.)

Although the practice of altering
images (i.e. changing an image so that the adjustments present a different interpretation
of the subject) seems on the surface to be a straight forward activity in terms
of pushing imagery around, the issue is usually more complex than this. For
most artists their practice is governed by intention (i.e. a leaning to
rationalise one’s practice and to “say” something that goes beyond the creative
urge). There is also the problematic issue of ethics (i.e. a set of professional
values that determines whether the use of certain imagery is appropriate) and
aesthetics (i.e. a personal concern for quality that is lightly married to a
concern to be authentic to one’s personal sensitivities). Essentially the practice
of altering images is usually underpinned by discipline specific issues guiding an artist’s hand.